Painter, graphic artist and photographer known by the name of Eugen
Zotow in Liechtenstein, originally came from today's Ukraine, which
gained state sovereignty in 1991 after the dissolution of the Soviet
Union. Born Ivan Miassojedoff in Kharkiv in 1881, he attended his
father's painting school in Poltava, a city in central Ukraine, before
being moving to Moscow and St. Petersburg for academic studies in
painting.
The impact of the First World War and the Russian
Revolution caused his life plans to fail and prompted him to leave his
homeland. The Crimean peninsula was his last stop on home soil in 1919.
His path to exile took him and his small family via stops in several
other places to Berlin and finally to Liechtenstein in 1938. As an
exile, he was only allowed to earn his living by practising art,
according to an order of the Liechtenstein government. Until his death
in 1953, he created numerous works of art and also designed twelve
Liechtenstein postage stamps.
Now two special stamps are being
dedicated to him as part of a joint issue with Ukraine: Philately
Liechtenstein chose the motif "View of Vaduz Castle" (face value: CHF
1.40) from the collection of Prof. Eugen Zotow-Ivan
Miassojedoff-Stiftung, Vaduz, while the Ukrainian Post (Ukrposhta) opted
for a "Self-portrait" (face value: CHF 2.20) from Poltava Art Museum.